diff options
author | Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com> | 2014-03-26 12:45:49 +0100 |
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committer | Michael Tokarev <mjt@tls.msk.ru> | 2014-04-18 10:33:36 +0400 |
commit | e40cdb0e6efb795e4d19368987d53e3e4ae19cf7 (patch) | |
tree | 2a4f426dee8364c1d190a8c91b414ba745edfb52 /scripts/coverity-model.c | |
parent | 968fc24d843c9e9b24231ca1960b47ef2fc724ea (diff) |
scripts: add sample model file for Coverity Scan
This is the model file that is being used for the QEMU project's scans
on scan.coverity.com. It fixed about 30 false positives (10% of the
total) and exposed about 60 new memory leaks.
The file is not automatically used; changes to it must be propagated
to the website manually by an admin (right now Markus, Peter and me
are admins).
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Tokarev <mjt@tls.msk.ru>
Diffstat (limited to 'scripts/coverity-model.c')
-rw-r--r-- | scripts/coverity-model.c | 183 |
1 files changed, 183 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/scripts/coverity-model.c b/scripts/coverity-model.c new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..4c99a85cfc --- /dev/null +++ b/scripts/coverity-model.c @@ -0,0 +1,183 @@ +/* Coverity Scan model + * + * Copyright (C) 2014 Red Hat, Inc. + * + * Authors: + * Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> + * Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com> + * + * This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or, at your + * option, any later version. See the COPYING file in the top-level directory. + */ + + +/* + * This is the source code for our Coverity user model file. The + * purpose of user models is to increase scanning accuracy by explaining + * code Coverity can't see (out of tree libraries) or doesn't + * sufficiently understand. Better accuracy means both fewer false + * positives and more true defects. Memory leaks in particular. + * + * - A model file can't import any header files. Some built-in primitives are + * available but not wchar_t, NULL etc. + * - Modeling doesn't need full structs and typedefs. Rudimentary structs + * and similar types are sufficient. + * - An uninitialized local variable signifies that the variable could be + * any value. + * + * The model file must be uploaded by an admin in the analysis settings of + * http://scan.coverity.com/projects/378 + */ + +#define NULL ((void *)0) + +typedef unsigned char uint8_t; +typedef char int8_t; +typedef unsigned int uint32_t; +typedef int int32_t; +typedef long ssize_t; +typedef unsigned long long uint64_t; +typedef long long int64_t; +typedef _Bool bool; + +/* exec.c */ + +typedef struct AddressSpace AddressSpace; +typedef uint64_t hwaddr; + +static void __write(uint8_t *buf, ssize_t len) +{ + int first, last; + __coverity_negative_sink__(len); + if (len == 0) return; + buf[0] = first; + buf[len-1] = last; + __coverity_writeall__(buf); +} + +static void __read(uint8_t *buf, ssize_t len) +{ + __coverity_negative_sink__(len); + if (len == 0) return; + int first = buf[0]; + int last = buf[len-1]; +} + +bool address_space_rw(AddressSpace *as, hwaddr addr, uint8_t *buf, + int len, bool is_write) +{ + bool result; + + // TODO: investigate impact of treating reads as producing + // tainted data, with __coverity_tainted_data_argument__(buf). + if (is_write) __write(buf, len); else __read(buf, len); + + return result; +} + +/* Tainting */ + +typedef struct {} name2keysym_t; +static int get_keysym(const name2keysym_t *table, + const char *name) +{ + int result; + if (result > 0) { + __coverity_tainted_string_sanitize_content__(name); + return result; + } else { + return 0; + } +} + +/* glib memory allocation functions. + * + * Note that we ignore the fact that g_malloc of 0 bytes returns NULL, + * and g_realloc of 0 bytes frees the pointer. + * + * Modeling this would result in Coverity flagging a lot of memory + * allocations as potentially returning NULL, and asking us to check + * whether the result of the allocation is NULL or not. However, the + * resulting pointer should never be dereferenced anyway, and in fact + * it is not in the vast majority of cases. + * + * If a dereference did happen, this would suppress a defect report + * for an actual null pointer dereference. But it's too unlikely to + * be worth wading through the false positives, and with some luck + * we'll get a buffer overflow reported anyway. + */ + +void *malloc(size_t); +void *calloc(size_t, size_t); +void *realloc(void *, size_t); +void free(void *); + +void * +g_malloc(size_t n_bytes) +{ + void *mem; + __coverity_negative_sink__(n_bytes); + mem = malloc(n_bytes == 0 ? 1 : n_bytes); + if (!mem) __coverity_panic__(); + return mem; +} + +void * +g_malloc0(size_t n_bytes) +{ + void *mem; + __coverity_negative_sink__(n_bytes); + mem = calloc(1, n_bytes == 0 ? 1 : n_bytes); + if (!mem) __coverity_panic__(); + return mem; +} + +void g_free(void *mem) +{ + free(mem); +} + +void *g_realloc(void * mem, size_t n_bytes) +{ + __coverity_negative_sink__(n_bytes); + mem = realloc(mem, n_bytes == 0 ? 1 : n_bytes); + if (!mem) __coverity_panic__(); + return mem; +} + +void *g_try_malloc(size_t n_bytes) +{ + __coverity_negative_sink__(n_bytes); + return malloc(n_bytes == 0 ? 1 : n_bytes); +} + +void *g_try_malloc0(size_t n_bytes) +{ + __coverity_negative_sink__(n_bytes); + return calloc(1, n_bytes == 0 ? 1 : n_bytes); +} + +void *g_try_realloc(void *mem, size_t n_bytes) +{ + __coverity_negative_sink__(n_bytes); + return realloc(mem, n_bytes == 0 ? 1 : n_bytes); +} + +/* Other glib functions */ + +typedef struct _GIOChannel GIOChannel; +GIOChannel *g_io_channel_unix_new(int fd) +{ + GIOChannel *c = g_malloc0(sizeof(GIOChannel)); + __coverity_escape__(fd); + return c; +} + +void g_assertion_message_expr(const char *domain, + const char *file, + int line, + const char *func, + const char *expr) +{ + __coverity_panic__(); +} |